The Prime Minister Kevin Rudd rolled into the Territory this week to attend the 50th anniversary celebrations of the signing of the historic Yirrkala bark petitions that paved the way for Indigenous land rights.

Asked what the anniversary meant to him, Jack Ah Kit (Former Labor Minister) said, "It's very significant because if we look back at history, flowing on from that we had the Gurindji Wave Hill 'walk-off' and the 1967 referendum, certainly historic, life's a lot better but it's not great, we need to keep working at it."

Jack was part of the panel of Carol Phayer(Local Artist) and Tom Lewis(Military Historian) that also discussed the hefty pay rises that Queensland politicians awarded themselves, and the idea that taxis should record all conversations to help stamp out violence.